For the past 15 years, Bob Bowman has
watched Michael Phelps transform from an ornery 11-year-old into the greatest
swimmer who ever lived. He's been there for all the medals, all the awards and
all the nail-biting finishes. He's served as a father-figure at times, teaching
Phelps about life, how to drive a stick shift and how to tie a tie.
But ask Bob Bowman about when he's felt the
greatest sense of pride for his pupil and the coach will now tell you the
moment came on the night of Tuesday, July 31, 2012.
After a race that Phelps lost.
"It was kind of heartbreaking,"
Bowman said through watery eyes at the end of the night.
The stage was perfectly set for Phelps
heading into Tuesday night. He needed just one medal to tie and two to break
the Olympic record of 18 career medals set by former Russian gymnast Larisa
Latynina. He was swimming in his marquee event, the 200 butterfly, which he
hadn't lost in at a major international competition in over 12 years, and the
4x200 relay, as well.
But a funny thing happened on the way to
the record. Phelps lost. He had led the 200 butterfly almost the entire race;
but South Africa's Chad le Clos reached further in the last stretch and touched
the wall .05 seconds before Phelps. It was the type of race Phelps had always won,
and the ultra-competitive Phelps was furious.
But he had this coming. For years, Phelps
had cruised into the wall at the end of his races. And on Tuesday, in his last
200 butterfly of his career, it caught up with him.
"It came out at the moment I needed it
most," Phelps would say later. "I realize that and I'm OK with that.
It's the decision I made."
U.S. teammate Davis Tarwater, who considers
the 200 fly his best event and trained with Phelps for four years, disagreed.
Forget the color of the medal. He called Phelps' 200 fly one of the best of his
career.
"I've seen him other-worldly and
struggle and everywhere in between," Tarwater said. "I just thought
tonight he came out and it was cold toughness, all grit, all heart. I saw it in
his eyes. I saw it in his face. He was doing everything he could, muscling it
out, trying to get the win. I can recognize that. I have so much respect for
that man."
But in the first few minutes after the
race, Phelps didn't see it that way. Before Phelps had accepted such failure,
the look across his face was one of bitter disappointment. By the time he made
the seven-minute walk to the warm-down pool, where Bowman was waiting, the look
hadn't changed.
"He was very upset at first,"
Bowman said. "Not crying upset, but angry, and we just had come to grips
with the fact that was that. He got in the warm-down pool and started swimming
and really within about five minutes he gathered his composure and was ready to
go."
From there, it was time for the medal
ceremony, where le Clos waited. It was fitting, in a way, that he was the one
standing atop the podium. As a 12-year-old boy, le Clos had watched Phelps swim
at the 2004 Games in Athens and decided he wanted to become a swimmer. Four
years later, when Phelps out-touched Milorad Cavic by one one-hundredth of a
second to win gold in the 100 butterfly in Beijing, it was le Clos who looked
on in awe and would later put seven copies of the swim on his computer in
multiple languages.
He admitted he is Phelps' biggest fan and
beating him Tuesday night was "the greatest moment of my life."
One man's nightmare was another man's
dream. Phelps could sense how excited le Clos was. And as the two stood on the
podium, a smile cracked on Phelps' face. And as he and le Clos walked around
the pool deck and posed for pictures, Phelps smiled more. He told the
20-year-old how to hold the gold medal when posing for pictures, and then he
gave him directions on where to go after the medal parade.
As Bowman looked on, he was amazed. The
younger Phelps never would have done that. He would have stewed over the bitter
loss and carried it with him for weeks. But, with seemingly everything at
stake, Phelps turned his emotions around with one warm-down swim.
"The way he handled that silver medal
tonight, I think I'm prouder of that one than any of the other ones,"
Bowman said. "Just the whole thing showed how he has matured and how he
understands what this entire process is all about."
An hour after his disappointment in the 200
fly, Phelps was back on the pool deck again, anchoring his team in the 4x200
free relay. He told his fellow teammates -- Ryan Lochte, Conor Dwyer and Ricky
Berens -- to get him a big lead. He didn't want any sort of last-lap collapse
like the team had in the 4x100 relay Sunday night.
They did just that. By the time Phelps came
down the pool with 25 meters to go, the outcome was certain. And for the first
time in his career, Phelps said he smiled in the middle of competition.
"I knew we had done it," he said.
When he touched the wall, he spit a stream
of water straight into the air. He knew. His teammates knew. Everyone knew. It
was his 19th career Olympic medal.
As the night came to an end with Phelps,
Lochte, Dwyer and Berens atop the medal stand after their win, Phelps
apologized to his teammates. There would be no sing along with the national
anthem on this night. He knew if he tried to even mouth the words, the tears
would come.
"Not even a word out," Phelps
said. "My eyes were getting watery. It was emotional. A pretty cool
feeling."
There are those who will say the way the
events unfolded Tuesday night were less than perfect. This is Michael Phelps,
after all. From what we learned in Beijing, he's only supposed to win gold. But
if anything, Phelps' second-place finish in his marquee event and his failing
to reach the medal podium in the 400 IM on Sunday should serve as a lesson in
appreciating how hard it is to win 19 medals over a span of three Olympic
Games.
"I thought the golds used to come
easy," Bowman said. "Now it's like, 'Oh, please, win a medal.' It
underscores how difficult it is to win a medal of any color at this event, and
it's getting harder and harder. Anyone who gets any kind of medal should be
highly celebrated."
Or in the case of Bowman's most famous
pupil, 19 times over with the likely title of the greatest Olympian who has
ever lived. At least that's what the man who beat him Tuesday night believes.
"Of course," le Clos said.
"He's definitely the greatest Olympian of all time."
And how did Phelps plan on celebrating such
an achievement? With three events left to swim this week -- the 100 butterfly,
200 IM and medley relay -- there wasn't much on tap for Tuesday night. Dinner,
a meeting with the ice bucket and, if all goes well, some sleep. Prelims for
the 200 IM were waiting Wednesday morning.
"There are still other races and
that's the one thing I have on my mind now," Phelps said. "I'm going
to attempt to sleep tonight. I'm just not sure it's going to be possible."
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